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Signed Language and Gesture Research in Cognitive Linguistics
Janzen, Terry [Herausgeber]. - Berlin : de Gruyter Mouton, 2022
DNB Subject Category Language
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2
The medium is still the message: Canadian federal politicians' gestural stance markers of credibility and opinion
Sie, Trevor. - 2022
BASE
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3
Preverbal subjects in Makkan Arabic: A feature-inheritance approach
Makkawi, Amani. - 2021
Abstract: This dissertation argues that not all preverbal nominals in Arabic are instances of left-dislocation/topicalization but that some can occupy preverbal subject positions. It explores three types of predications that follow preverbal subjects: verbal predicates, copular predicates and sentential predicates. I propose that in all sentence types, preverbal subjects are derived by movement from lower subject and non-subject positions to the specifier of the Subject of Predication (SubjP) projection to satisfy the Subject of Predication (SoP) feature (Cardinaletti, 1997, 2004). Based on the feature-inheritance approach (Chomsky 2000, 2001, 2005) in which movement is only motivated by edge features (e.g., EPP), I propose that SoP is an edge feature that motivates movement in Makkan Arabic, and that the EPP feature in Arabic is rather satisfied by verb movement to the head T. The preverbal subject position [Spec, SubjP] position is recursive as it can optionally attract any definite nominal in the clause that bears the interpretable iSoP whether it is a thematic subject, object, object of preposition or possessor inside a DP. Thematic subjects undergo successive movement to [Spec, SubjP] passing through [Spec, AspP] and [Spec, TP] which are blocked for non-nominative nominals. When more than one nominal undergoes movement to [Spec, SubjP], the Shortest Move principle applies so that the highest nominal moves first, and the landing site is the closest [Spec, SubjP] position. I adopt the Copy Theory of Movement, in which movement entails making copies of the moved elements in the new positions, thus creating a movement chain. The successive movement of thematic subjects that bear the nominative Case leaves copies in [Spec, vP], [Spec, AspP] and [Spec, TP], one of which can optionally be spelled out in addition to the head of the chain (Halle and Marantz 1993, 1994). When non-subject nominals undergo movement to the SubjP projection, the head of the chain gets its original Case overridden and receives nominative Case. The copy at the tail of the chain obligatorily spells out in the form of a resumptive pronoun bearing accusative or genitive Case because these copies are marked as distinct by the operation of Copy. ; October 2021
Keyword: Makkan Arabic; Preverbal subjects; subject of predication; syntactic movement
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1993/35901
BASE
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4
Grasping at metaphors: a corpus-based analysis of the inferential processes which shape semantic construal
Doell, Sydney. - 2021
BASE
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5
Pragmatics and manipulation in three shakespearean tragedies
Wyman, Chris. - 2021
BASE
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6
A corpus-based study on the grammaticalization of được in Vietnamese
BASE
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7
A corpus-based study of inanimate classifiers in Vietnamese
BASE
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8
Analysis of referring expressions in political texts translated from English to Arabic
Albader, Assim. - 2021
BASE
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9
The interaction between surrogates and tokens in American Sign Language
Hawes, Dareth. - 2016
BASE
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10
Exploring the benefits of a separate course in ASL fingerspelling and numbering to develop students’ receptive competency
BASE
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11
Religious language within Jürgen Habermas and cognitive linguistics
Derkson, Kyle. - 2014
BASE
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12
The interpreter's stance in intersubjective discourse
In: Sign language research, uses and practices (Berlin, 2013), p. 63-84
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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13
Individual differences in text predictive inferences
BASE
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14
Individual differences in text predictive inferences
BASE
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15
Signed language pragmatics
In: Pragmatics in practice (Amsterdam, 2011), p. 278-294
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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16
The influence of contradicting implication on inference generation in discourse processing: a phantom recollection approach
BASE
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17
The influence of contradicting implication on inference generation in discourse processing: a phantom recollection approach
BASE
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18
Intersubjectivity in interpreted interactions : the interpreter's role in co-constructing meaning
In: The shared mind (Amsterdam, 2008), p. 333-356
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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19
Elizabeth A. Winston (Ed.). Educational interpreting: How it can succeed
In: Interpreting. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 8 (2006) 2, 229
OLC Linguistik
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20
Ethics and professionalism in interpreting
In: Topics in signed language interpreting (Amsterdam, 2005), p. 165-202
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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